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(CNN)The on-again, off-again evacuation agreement in eastern Aleppo is back on track, rebel groups said Saturday.

"There has been an agreement reached with the Russians about the evacuation of Aleppo, no further information or comments in the current moment," Ahmad Qurah Ali, spokesman for the rebel group Ahrah al-Sham, said in a tweet.

Earlier, the negotiator from the group, Farouk Abu Bakr, who is in eastern Aleppo, tweeted: "An agreement has been reached between revolutionaries, Russia and Iran, about Aleppo."

A Syrian government official told Reuters there was an agreement to resume the evacuation of eastern Aleppo, alongside evacuations from four besieged towns.

The Syrian and Russian governments have not officially confirmed the deal.

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A spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Damascus, Ingy Sedky, said that evacuation teams were still awaiting a firm security agreement to start moving busloads of refugees from the war-torn city.

The relief agency fears that renewed fighting will again stop the evacuation as it did previously, Sedky said.

"This time we need a solid agreement from all parties," she said.

Thousands of people are still in eastern Aleppo, Sedky said. She appeared skeptical of reports of an agreement to start evacuations once buses arrived from Idlib, a city about 37 miles southwest of Aleppo.

Earlier, the ICRC said in a statement it had "received some signals from the parties that a new agreement could be reached soon."

"We're ready to resume facilitating the evacuation according to our humanitarian mandate," it said, adding that it first needed solid guarantees of safe passage from all parties on the ground.

Meanwhile, thousands of people -- including women, children, the sick and injured -- remain trapped in freezing temperatures in eastern Aleppo as they wait for the evacuation operation to continue.

Previous evacuation attempts thwarted

Saturday's announcement comes after the evacuation of thousands of refugees from the besieged city came to a halt on Friday, according to the ICRC.

Red Cross staff, Syrian Red Crescent workers and representatives of the World Health Organization had been told to leave eastern Aleppo.

Syrian state news agency SANA said the evacuation was stopped after some of the evacuees were found to be transporting weapons and advanced communication devices.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights offered a different view, saying rebels breached the ceasefire to protest delays in evacuating hundreds of people from two Shia enclaves -- Al-Foua and Kefreia -- in the rebel-held Idlib province to the west of Aleppo.

From one war zone to another?

As many as 9,000 people have already been taken out of the besieged city in nine convoys since Thursday.

"If diplomacy cannot solve the problem in Aleppo, people can solve it," tweeted the charity which hosted the mass rally at the Cilvegozu border crossing.

UN demands action amid nightmare

United Nations special advisor Jan Egeland expressed frustration with the lengthy negotiation process, saying in a tweet on Saturday that evacuations from eastern Aleppo must resume now, without conditions.

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But the nightmare continues for one activist working inside the city who broke down while talking to CNN reporters Friday, saying he wasn't sure if his children would ever return to Aleppo.

"We waited for the international community and the United Nations to punish the criminal and not the victims (the people). Unfortunately the punishment was for the people. They have displaced us from our land," he said.

"Honestly I don't know if we can return back someday to our land or if it is going to be like the fate of the Palestinians."

One man's 'liberation?'

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The Syrian regime is on the brink of retaking the whole city of Aleppo, which has been partly held by rebels for more than four years.

On Thursday, Assad celebrated the "liberation" of Aleppo, congratulating the Syrian people and saying, "History is being written by every Syrian citizen."

However US Secretary of State John Kerry described what had already occurred in Aleppo as "unconscionable," adding all sides had to work together on a ceasefire.

If the regime does take control of the key city, it would mark a turning point in the brutal five-year civil war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people. The development would put the regime back in charge of all five major cities in Syria, making a political opposition far less likely.